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1.
Gen Comp Endocrinol ; 345: 114394, 2024 01 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37871848

ABSTRACT

The COVID-19 pandemic impacted personal and professional life. For academics, research, teaching, and service tasks were upended and we all had to navigate the altered landscape. However, some individuals faced a disproportionate burden, particularly academics with minoritized identities or those who were early career, were caregivers, or had intersecting identities. As comparative endocrinologists, we determine how aspects of individual and species-level variation influence response to, recovery from, and resilience in the face of stressors. Here, we flip that framework and apply an integrative biological lens to the impact of the COVID-19 chronic stressor on our endocrine community. We address how the pandemic altered impact factors of academia (e.g., scholarly products) and relatedly, how factors of impact (e.g., sex, gender, race, career stage, caregiver status, etc.) altered the way in which individuals could respond. We predict the pandemic will have long-term impacts on the population dynamics, composition, and landscape of our academic ecosystem. Impact factors of research, namely journal submissions, were altered by COVID-19, and women authors saw a big dip. We discuss this broadly and then report General and Comparative Endocrinology (GCE) manuscript submission and acceptance status by gender and geographic region from 2019 to 2023. We also summarize how the pandemic impacted individuals with different axes of identity, how academic institutions have responded, compile proposed solutions, and conclude with a discussion on what we can all do to (re)build the academy in an equitable way. At GCE, the first author positions had gender parity, but men outnumbered women at the corresponding author position. Region of manuscript origin mattered for submission and acceptance rates, and women authors from Asia and the Middle East were the most heavily impacted by the pandemic. The number of manuscripts submitted dropped after year 1 of the pandemic and has not yet recovered. Thus, COVID-19 was a chronic stressor for the GCE community.


Subject(s)
COVID-19 , Endocrinology , Male , Humans , Female , Pandemics , Ecosystem , COVID-19/epidemiology , Asia
2.
Gen Comp Endocrinol ; 333: 114166, 2023 03 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36402244

ABSTRACT

The phenotypes observed in urban and rural environments are often distinct; however, it remains unclear how these novel urban phenotypes arise. Hormone-mediated maternal effects likely play a key role in shaping developmental trajectories of offspring in different environments. Thus, we measured corticosterone (Cort) and testosterone (T) concentrations in eggs across the laying sequence in addition to Cort concentrations in nestling and adult female house wrens (Troglodytes aedon) at one urban and one rural site. We found that egg T concentrations were not different between birds from urban and rural sites. However, across all life stages (egg, nestling, and adult female), Cort concentrations were higher at the urban site. Additionally, urban nestling Cort concentrations, but not rural, correlated with fine-scale urban density scores. Furthermore, rural egg volume increased over the laying sequence, but urban egg volume leveled off mid-sequence, suggesting either that urban mothers are resource limited or that they are employing a different brood development strategy than rural mothers. Our study is one of the first to show that egg hormone concentrations differ in an urban environment with differences persisting in chick development and adult life stages. We suggest that maternal endocrine programing may shape offspring phenotypes in urban environments and are an overlooked yet important aspect underlying mechanisms of urban evolution.


Subject(s)
Songbirds , Urbanization , Animals , Female , Eggs , Corticosterone , Phenotype , Egg Yolk
3.
Ecol Appl ; 32(8): e2688, 2022 12.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35754197

ABSTRACT

Urbanization is increasing at a rapid pace globally. Understanding the links among environmental characteristics, phenotypes, and fitness enables researchers to predict the impact of changing landscapes on individuals and populations. Although avian reproductive output is typically lower in urban compared with natural areas, the underlying reasons for this discrepancy may lie at the intersection of abiotic and biotic environmental and individual differences. Recent advances in urban ecology highlight the effect of heavy metal contamination on stress physiology. As high levels of glucocorticoid hormones decrease parental investment, these hormones might be the link to decreased reproductive success in areas of high environmental pollution. In this study, we aimed to identify which abiotic stressors are linked to avian reproductive output in urban areas and whether this link is mediated by individual hormone levels. We used fine-scaled estimates (2 m2 spatial resolution) of nighttime light, noise, and urban density to assess their impacts on the physiological condition of adult house sparrows (Passer domesticus). We measured circulating levels of lead and glucocorticoid concentrations in 40 breeding pairs of free-living house sparrows and related these physiological traits to reproductive success. Using structural equation modeling, we found that increased urban density levels linked directly to increased plasma corticosterone and lead concentrations that subsequently led to decreased fledgling mass. Sparrows with increased lead concentrations in plasma also had higher corticosterone levels. Although urban areas may be attractive due to decreased natural predators and available nesting sites, they may act as ecological traps that increase physiological damage and decrease fitness. To illustrate, avian development is strongly explained by parental corticosterone levels, which vary significantly in response to urban density and lead pollution. With fine-scale ecological mapping for a species with small home ranges, we demonstrated the presence and impacts of urban stressors in a small city with high human densities.


Subject(s)
Sparrows , Animals , Humans , Sparrows/physiology , Lead/toxicity , Corticosterone , Glucocorticoids , Urbanization
4.
Biol Lett ; 15(1): 20180718, 2019 01 31.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30958207

ABSTRACT

While it is well established that maternal stress hormones, such as corticosterone (CORT), can induce transgenerational phenotypic plasticity, few studies have addressed the influence of maternal CORT on pre-natal life stages. We tested the hypothesis that experimentally increased CORT levels of gravid female eastern fence lizards ( Sceloporus undulatus) would alter within-egg embryonic phenotype, particularly heart rates. We found that embryos from CORT-treated mothers had heart rates that increased faster with increasing temperature, resulting in higher heart rates at developmentally relevant temperatures but similar heart rates at maintenance relevant temperatures, compared with embryos of control mothers. Thus, maternal CORT appears to alter the physiology of pre-natal offspring. This may speed development and decrease the amount of time spent in eggs, the most vulnerable stage of life.


Subject(s)
Corticosterone , Lizards , Animals , Female , Heart Rate , Temperature
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